Guardian investigation finds labourers – including those on World Cup-related projects – were left with huge debts

Low-wage migrant workers have been forced to pay billions of dollars in recruitment fees to secure their jobs in World Cup host nation Qatar over the past decade, a Guardian investigation has found.

Bangladeshi men migrating to Qatar are likely to have paid about $1.5bn (£1.14bn) in fees, and possibly as high as $2bn, between 2011 and 2020. Nepali men are estimated to have paid around $320m, and possibly more than $400m, in the four years between mid-2015 to mid-2019.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘No one wants to be right about this’: climate scientists’ horror and exasperation as global predictions play out

As the northern hemisphere burns, experts feel deep sadness – and resentment…

Mound zero: what is Marble Arch’s new landmark all about?

Dreamed up to drag shoppers back to Oxford Street, the £2m artificial…

Only human: why is cinema so hungry for cannibals?

Bones and All is the freshest blood in a long and grisly…

Cormac McCarthy, celebrated US novelist, dies aged 89

Author of The Road and No Country For Old Men died in…